Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 312, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 May 1934 — Page 13
MAY 10, 1934-
Hitler Job Dispensing Condemned
Graduates of Colleges in Kitchens Declared Backward Move. BY GRETTA PALMER Tim** Sp**il Writer N'EW YORK, May 10.—'The war between men and women may be more than a sprightly joke in The New Yorker's pages it Hitler keeps on at his present speed. The great Aryan fancier has now done -~ goess a t! He has announced that 60.0000 German women, on graduation from
school, will be forced to accept salaryless jobs as mothers’ helpers and general scullery maids in homes which can not afford a servant. Femini nis t s should properly look with a certa in affection upon Hitler. The extravagances in his treatment of women reduce to patent
WB&tK&mk Hi
•Miss Palmer
absurdity the system of discriminating. in the matter of jobs, between the two sexes. The utter irrationality of setting a woman Ph. D. to the task of scrubbing bathroom floors would have charmed Gilbert and Sullivan. There is an almost heroic stupidity in the system of assigning one-half of the nation's citizens to household tasks for no better reason than that there are not enough jobs outside the home to go around. The possibility of handing out what jobs there are to those who show themselves best fitted for them has not, it seems, occurred to the German dictator as a plausible plan. Neither has the idea of redistributing the hours of employment so that there is work for every one who wishes it. "One year in a household for every maiden’’ is the newest German slogan, to be added to the list of little dandies which have already been coined by the present government. One year in a household, giving Junior his porridge and ironing the good frail's petticoats, regardless of the fact that you may be equipped to do medical research or engineering or landscape architecture. Be womanly, riurn you! is the sentiment of the German state. Rejects Valuable Gain We have heard in this country a great deal of talk about the paradox of farmers ploughing under crops while men in the city's slums go hungry. We have been asked to consider the irony of a situation in w hich overproduction gluts the market and there is still want. But this is nothing compared to the paradox of dumping human talents and abilities because, forsooth, there are too many able persons in the country ".ir the work to be done. This attempt to turn the clock back in the way of woman's progress is a deliberate rejection of a new and valuable force which has entered modern life. It is something like banning electricity, which has created more unemployment than the entrance of women into business and industry ever did. It is like tossing aside every device and discovery which has lightened labor because of the hoary tradition that man must work from sun to sun. It simply will not do. You can not dispose that easily of the new powers and abilities that women have discovered within themselves by any such trumpery rieviee as this, Herr Hitler. There is bound to be a catch, and in this case the drawback to your little plan is so obvious that it might have caught the eye of that man in your cabinet whose duty it is to keep the women within bounds. Every girl graduate who rolls up her diploma and sets to work in pomp other woman's home is going to release that woman from the household chores which have until row kept her quiet. She will have time to wonder and to weigh the kind of dcai that is being handed to her spx. Had you thought of that? Six hundred thousand girl graduates will be bottled up in the German kitchens. But 600.000 married women will be set free to engage in that most unwomanly occupation of clamoring for an even break.
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Contract Bridge
Today’* Contract Problem South plays the contract at six no trump. West opens the deuce of spades. South wins and starts the heart suit. Should East win the first or second heart trick? And if not, why? 49 5 3 VAQ 6 5 2 ♦ A 10 5 4 4 10 4J142 N '4K I® VS W E V K 9 7 4 ♦ J S 7 2 S 083 4J7624 Q 2 S 4 3 4 AQ7 6 V J 10 3 ♦K Q 6 4A K 5 Solution In next Issue. 8
Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge I.eague A I ''HERE is a certain thrill in making all your trump separately. Os course, a hand must be timed properly to allow this. You must make sure that you are going to retain control of the hand. Today's hand is not dilftcult to play, but the declarer makes tep trump tricks and two aces. If'he had led even one round of trump, his contract would have been defeated. I believed the bidding on the hand rather interesting when the had w T as played. mm* EAST has a close decision to make between doubling the one diamond or bidding a spade. Personally, I would prefer the double. With that hand you are certainly willing to play it at two spades. When south bid two clubs, West's
Daily Recipe BEEF STEW 2 pounds chuck beef U carrots 6 small white onions 6 medium-sized potatoes 1 small bunch celery 2 tablespoons minced parsley 1/i teaspoons salt Pepper Have meat cut into small pieces, about two inches across. Wipe with damp cloth. Brown in a kettle containing hot lard. Add boiling water and cook gently. Fortyfive minutes before serving add vegetables. Have carrots cut in lengthwise pieces unless they are small enough to leave whole. Cut celery into four-inch sticks. Serve on hot platter, the meat in the center and the vegetables attractively arranged around it. Sprinkle with minced parsley. Thicken the liquid for gravy and serve separately. If desired, twelve minutes oefore the stew is to be served, dumplings may be dropped from a spoon into the stew. If so, allow them to rest on the vegetables rather than dropping them into the liquid. The stew kettle must be kept covered tightly w'hile the dumplings are being steamed.
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i bid of two diamonds w-as a cue bid showing support for spades. On the j next round, when West forced in clubs, he was making a direct slam ; try. East showed control of the heart suit with a bid of four hearts. While I don't believe in misuse of aceshowlng bids, there are times when an ace-showing bid of this kind is \aluable. That was all the information that West needed to jump to six spades. mm * opening lead was the king of clubs, declarer won with the ace in dummy and discarded a losing heart. The hand will crossruff right out for ten tricks. All the declarer needs to lose is a heart. If a spade had been opened, of course the declarer would then have to lead up to the queen of hearts to ievelop a trick to make his contract. He would then user eight of his ! trump for cross-ruffing, j (Copyright, 1934, by NEA Service)
4 6 V 9 6 2 4AKQ 8 5 3 49 8 4 4QJ 95 2 N I4 AKB 7 4 VQ74W £ V A 8 3 4 None S 4 10 9 6 4 2 4A107 52| D>lr 4 None 4 10 3 V K J 10 5 4 J 7 4KQJ6I Duplicate—All vul. Opening lead —4 K. South West North Mast Pass Pass 14 14 241 24 Pass 2 4 Pass 4 4 Pass 4 V Pass. 6 4 Pass Pass 3
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Mothers to Be Honored at Club Tea Latreian Group Party Will Be Held at Home of Mrs. Brown. Alpha Kappa Latreian Club will honor mothers of members at a tea Sunday at the home of the president, Mrs. Royer Knode Brown. 5868 Carrollton avenue. Mrs. David Ross, councillor, also will attend. Mrs. G. A. Miller and Mrs. E. R. Hisey will pour at the tea table and assistants in the dining room will be Miss Ruth Beckman. Mrs. Robert Berner, Miss Helen Noble and Miss Elizabeth Hisey. Mrs. Lorinda Cottingham Howell will present a musical program. The recently elected officers will be installed at a luncheon May 22 at the Charm House. Mrs. Brown will install Miss Hicey as president. Miss Hisey is chairman of the 1 o’clock luncheon. A picnic in June will conduct the club’s activities. misYhelen dice TO WED IN JUNE Dr. and Mrs. B. D. Peterson, 3504 Guilford aventie, announce the engagement of their niece, Miss Helen Dice, to Dr. Willis Law Pugh. Bellefontaine, O. The wedding will take place in June. Dr. Pugh attended Wittenberg college and is a graduate of Ohio State university. Miss Dice attended Madame Blaker’s school. Rho Zeta Tau sorority will meet tonight at the home of Miss Dorothy Zoiniger.
A Womans Viewpoint BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
THE congress of the United States is in a position to give real meaning to Mother's day in 1934. For some time our deference to those whom we speak of as the most important part of the population has been expressed with flowers, florid phrases and long prayers recommending them highly to the Almighty God. In spite of this, the need of American motherhood has never ben so great as it is today, and never have women been so wearied of words nor so anxious for action. The fate of the birth control bills lies at present in the hands of members of the judiciary committees of the senate and the house of representatives. Everybody, including these members, knows, or should know, the figures concerning abortion deaths in the country, the high percentage of casualties at childbirth, and the plight of the women who, speaking physically and economically, are too weak to have children. Yet these mothers remain at the mercy of the w'olves who prey upon them with nostrums and fads and fears. At the last hearing upon the bills in question none of the facts brought forward by their advo-
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cates was disproved or adequately refuted. They were not shaped with the intention of forcing birth control upon any individual or any group of individuals who may not think its practice compatible with righteousness. They were planned so that information and the protection of reputable physicians might be given to the women who should by no means, either for their own good or the welfare of society, bear more children. The regimentation of sentiment about Mother’s day has been one of the most deplorable occurrences of our century. It will continue to be a meaningless mockery until we present American mothers with good will, more substantial than bouquets and platitudes. No speeches, this year, if you please, gentlemen of the congress. We want voting unaccompanied by eloquent expressions of reverence. Tea for Mothers Set Mothers of members of Beta chapter. Theta Nu Chi sorority, will be honored Sunday afternoon at a tea at the Claypool. Miss Jeanetta Fields, chairman, will be assisted by Miss Gwendolyn Bynum.
SINGER WILL BE LUNCHEON GUEST Mrs. Earl B. Barnes, guest soloist at the morning musioale of the Indianapolis Matinee Musieale tomorrow at Ayres' auditorium will be honor guest at a luncheon to be given by Mrs. Wendell P. Coler. program chairman. Other guests will be Mrs. William B Hall. Muncie; Mrs. William Morris. Mrs. Russell Byers. Mrs. Harry Wilson. Mrs. Henry Buttolph and Mrs. Louise Mason Caldwell. Mrs. Frank Cregor. president, will entertain Mesdames W. C. Lynn, A. M. Robertson, James W. Lilly,
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Robert I. Blakeman, Charles A. Pfafflin and George P. Meier; Misses Ida Belle Sweenie and Carolyn Richardson. Mrs. I. F. Myer and Mrs. F. N. Crowell will attend with Mrs. John H. Hewitt. Council Meets Mrs. G. W. Horst was elected president of the Indianapolis, Educational Council at a meetin/ honoring members’ mothers yesierday at Whispering Winds. Other new officers Rre: Mrs. H. B. Nicely, vicepresident; Mrs. T. V. Hancock, recording secretary; Mrs. Walter Jackson, corresponding secretary, and Mrs, William H. Mallon, treasurer.
